Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is taking an elective at high school. Unfortunately, the teacher seems to have no idea what the class is about and there appears to be no syllabus. DS has contacted his counsellor about the class but has had no response. I've spoken to the teacher directly, and he informed me that they will be doing some "nice things" with some "nice computer packages". Would it be appropriate to contact the principal? In my country, the schooling is left up to the teachers and the parents don't get involved, so I've no idea what I should or shouldn't do.
Thank you.
Troll.
Yep
I'm not a troll. The class is STEM Design at Langley. Most of the class is spent doing nothing. My kid wants to learn something.
So, anyone have a good answer?
Anonymous wrote:Request a schedule change. The STEM electives sound good in theory and have impressive-looking classrooms, but there's little to nothing being taught. Anyone with a grade less than 100.0% had to really f--- up to earn it.
PP with the lazy kid - I promise they will thrive in any STEM elective.
-HS teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is taking an elective at high school. Unfortunately, the teacher seems to have no idea what the class is about and there appears to be no syllabus. DS has contacted his counsellor about the class but has had no response. I've spoken to the teacher directly, and he informed me that they will be doing some "nice things" with some "nice computer packages". Would it be appropriate to contact the principal? In my country, the schooling is left up to the teachers and the parents don't get involved, so I've no idea what I should or shouldn't do.
Thank you.
Troll.
Yep
I'm not a troll. The class is STEM Design at Langley. Most of the class is spent doing nothing. My kid wants to learn something.
So, anyone have a good answer?
Anonymous wrote:Request a schedule change. The STEM electives sound good in theory and have impressive-looking classrooms, but there's little to nothing being taught. Anyone with a grade less than 100.0% had to really f--- up to earn it.
PP with the lazy kid - I promise they will thrive in any STEM elective.
-HS teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is taking an elective at high school. Unfortunately, the teacher seems to have no idea what the class is about and there appears to be no syllabus. DS has contacted his counsellor about the class but has had no response. I've spoken to the teacher directly, and he informed me that they will be doing some "nice things" with some "nice computer packages". Would it be appropriate to contact the principal? In my country, the schooling is left up to the teachers and the parents don't get involved, so I've no idea what I should or shouldn't do.
Thank you.
Troll.
Yep
I'm not a troll. The class is STEM Design at Langley. Most of the class is spent doing nothing. My kid wants to learn something.
So, anyone have a good answer?
Anonymous wrote:Is the teacher new? They could’ve been a last minute hire and are trying to quickly learn the curriculum and what to do but focusing on establishing rules and stuff while they work on that? I know that would stink but I’d be patient for a few weeks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is taking an elective at high school. Unfortunately, the teacher seems to have no idea what the class is about and there appears to be no syllabus. DS has contacted his counsellor about the class but has had no response. I've spoken to the teacher directly, and he informed me that they will be doing some "nice things" with some "nice computer packages". Would it be appropriate to contact the principal? In my country, the schooling is left up to the teachers and the parents don't get involved, so I've no idea what I should or shouldn't do.
Thank you.
Troll.
Yep
Anonymous wrote:Is the teacher new? They could’ve been a last minute hire and are trying to quickly learn the curriculum and what to do but focusing on establishing rules and stuff while they work on that? I know that would stink but I’d be patient for a few weeks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is taking an elective at high school. Unfortunately, the teacher seems to have no idea what the class is about and there appears to be no syllabus. DS has contacted his counsellor about the class but has had no response. I've spoken to the teacher directly, and he informed me that they will be doing some "nice things" with some "nice computer packages". Would it be appropriate to contact the principal? In my country, the schooling is left up to the teachers and the parents don't get involved, so I've no idea what I should or shouldn't do.
Thank you.
Troll.
Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is taking an elective at high school. Unfortunately, the teacher seems to have no idea what the class is about and there appears to be no syllabus. DS has contacted his counsellor about the class but has had no response. I've spoken to the teacher directly, and he informed me that they will be doing some "nice things" with some "nice computer packages". Would it be appropriate to contact the principal? In my country, the schooling is left up to the teachers and the parents don't get involved, so I've no idea what I should or shouldn't do.
Thank you.